BusinessMirror

THAILAND’S PRO-DEMOCRACY MARCHERS LINK THEIR CAUSE TO MYANMAR PROTESTS

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BANGKOK—A new faction of thailand’s prodemocra­cy movement staged a protest march on Sunday, linking their cause with that of demonstrat­ors in Myanmar battling that neighborin­g country’s coup-installed military government.

Marchers sought but failed to go to thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha’s house, which is on an army base in Bangkok. Shipping containers were situated to block them, and police using water cannons, rubber bullets and tear gas barred the way. erawan emergency Services said 16 people were injured.

the demonstrat­ors abandoned their plan several hours later after taking an online vote of their supporters.

their action was linked to the informal Milk tea alliance of pro-democracy activists from Hong Kong, taiwan, thailand and Myanmar, which called for efforts Sunday online and in real life in support of the protests in Myanmar.

in Myanmar on Sunday, a crackdown on protesters by security forces left at least 18 people dead, according to the Un Human Rights Office.

Prayuth was targeted in part because he met Wednesday in Bangkok with the new foreign minister appointed by Myanmar’s junta.

the protest in Bangkok was the first to be led by a new group calling itself REDEM, short for Restart Democracy, whose self-proclaimed goals are to build democratic socialism and minimize political and economic inequality.

REDEM was launched last week as an offshoot of free Youth, one of the main groups that began rallying against the thai government last year.

Last year’s original protest coalition campaigned for Prayuth and his government to step down, the constituti­on to be amended to make it more democratic and the monarchy reformed to make it more accountabl­e.

the demand about the monarchy is the most controvers­ial, because the institutio­n has been widely considered an untouchabl­e, bedrock element of thai nationalis­m.

the protest movement lost steam when it took a break in December and January as thailand was hit by a second wave of coronaviru­s infections. it is now trying to reinvigora­te itself but has been hampered by the recent jailing of some of its leaders who are pending trial on several charges, including defaming the monarchy.

 ?? AP/FU ting ?? Migrant workers from Myanmar gather before participat­ing in a march by thai pro-democracy activists to the residence of thai prime Minister prayuth chan-ocha on February 28 in Bangkok, thailand. the group joined the march after prayuth met with the Myanmar Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin in Bangkok earlier in the week. Security forces in Myanmar have made mass arrests and appeared to use lethal force as they intensify their efforts to break up protests a month after the military staged a coup.
AP/FU ting Migrant workers from Myanmar gather before participat­ing in a march by thai pro-democracy activists to the residence of thai prime Minister prayuth chan-ocha on February 28 in Bangkok, thailand. the group joined the march after prayuth met with the Myanmar Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin in Bangkok earlier in the week. Security forces in Myanmar have made mass arrests and appeared to use lethal force as they intensify their efforts to break up protests a month after the military staged a coup.

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